Lifetime placement on sex offender list unconstitutional, SC Supreme Court rules
COLUMBIA The S.C. Supreme Court has unanimously ruled the states lifetime sex offender registration requirement is unconstitutional and people who demonstrate a low risk of reoffending should be able to petition a judge to have their names purged.
The June 9 order demands the General Assembly change the law to bring South Carolina in line with other states that provide offenders a path off of similar Megans Law-type registries.
The law is named for a 7-year-old in New Jersey who was sexually assaulted and murdered by a neighbor, prompting states around the country in the 1990s to tighten their laws around sex offenders.
Decades later, South Carolinas law, one of the nations strictest, remains largely untouched. It requires lifetime registration in a public database displaying each subjects name, home address and a photo no matter the degree of the offense.
Read more: https://www.postandcourier.com/politics/lifetime-placement-on-sex-offender-list-unconstitutional-sc-supreme-court-rules/article_897733b0-c932-11eb-b5f1-6348f734d73e.html